Girls with migraines pack on extra pounds

NEW YORK (Reuters Health) - Girls who get migraines appear more likely than their peers to gain extra weight during adulthood, scientists say.

They found that four of every ten women with childhood migraines had added at least 22 pounds since age 18, compared to three of ten women who never had the throbbing headaches.

Migraines have been linked to obesity before, but the new results held up even after taking into account that kids plagued by headaches might have been heavier to begin with.

The new study, published in the journal Headache, is the first to tie childhood migraines to later weight gain, according to the researchers.

It's possible that the pain, at times accompanied by nausea and vomiting, makes women eat differently or alter their physical activity, but the study wasn't designed to answer that.

Still, it does hint that weight and migraines may somehow fuel each other, said Michelle A. Williams, of the University of Washington in Seattle, who led the work.

Williams and colleagues analyzed data on more than 3,700 women who were being followed for another study on pregnancy outcomes.

They asked each woman what her weight and height were at age 18 and just before she got pregnant, and whether she had ever been told by her doctor that she had a migraine.

More than one out of every six women said they had been diagnosed with migraine -- a common problem among women that costs the U.S. some $20 billion annually in lost productivity and medical care.

Among normal-weight women, about one in every six had a migraine diagnosis, while one of every four obese women did. After ruling out other factors, such as high blood pressure and smoking, migraine risk was still higher among heavy women and rose with weight.

"Relative to normal weight women, severely obese women have more than a doubling in odds of migraine," Williams told Reuters Health in an e-mail.

While relying on the women's memory is a clear limitation of the study, the results support earlier research showing a link between weight and headaches in children and young adults (although the link appears to weaken as women get older).

For instance, one 2009 study found that heavy children who lost weight while receiving treatment for headaches started having headaches much less often than their peers whose weight remained stable or increased.

"I would endorse the advice offered by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention that promotes a lifestyle that includes healthy eating, regular physical activity, and avoidance of adult weight gain," said Williams, adding that more research is needed.